Bipolar Disorder (DSM-IV-TR #296.0–296.89)
Bipolar disorder is characterized by the occurrence of at least
occurrence of gradual transitions between all the various
one manic or mixed-manic episode during the patient’s
states.” In a similar vein, Carlson and Goodwin, in their
lifetime. Most patients also, at other times, have one or more
elegant paper of 1973, divided a manic episode into “three
depressive episodes. In the intervals between these episodes,
stages”: hypomania, or stage I; acute mania, or stage II; and
most patients return to their normal state of well-being. Thus
delirious mania, or stage III. As this “staging” of a manic
bipolar disorder is a “cyclic” or “periodic” illness, with
episode is very useful from a descriptive and differential
patients cycling “up” into a manic or mixed-manic episode,
diagnostic point of view, it is used in this chapter. Thus,
then returning to normal, and cycling “down” into a
when the term “manic episode” is used it may refer to any
depressive episode from which they likewise eventually more
one of the three stages of mania: hypomania, acute mania, or
Bipolar disorder is probably equally common among men
Manic episodes are often preceded by a prodrome, lasting
and women and has a lifetime prevalence of from 1.3 to
from a few days to a few months, of mild and often transitory
and indistinct manic symptoms. At times, however, no prodromal warning signs may occur, and the episode starts quite abruptly. When this occurs, patients often
Bipolar disorder in the past has been referred to as “manic
unaccountably wake up during the night full of energy and
depressive illness, circular type.” As noted in the introduction
vigor—the so-called “manic alert.”
to the chapter on major depression, the term “manic depressive illness,” at least in the United States, has more and more come to be used as equivalent to bipolar disorder. As
The cardinal symptoms of mania are the following:
this convention, however, is not worldwide, the term
heightened mood (either euphoric or irritable); flight of ideas
“bipolar” may be better, as it clearly indicates that the patient
and pressure of speech; and increased energy, decreased need
has an illness characterized by “swings” to the manic “pole”
for sleep, and hyperactivity. These cardinal symptoms are
and generally also to the depressive “pole.”
most plainly evident in hypomania. In acute mania they exacerbate and may be joined by delusions and some fragmentation of behavior, and in delirious mania only
tattered scraps of the cardinal symptoms may be present, otherwise being obscured by florid and often bizarre
Bipolar disorder may present with either a depressive or a
psychotic symptoms. Although all patients experience a
manic episode, and the peak age of onset for the first episode,
hypomanic stage, and almost all progress to at least a touch
whether depressive or manic, lies in the teens and early
of acute mania, only a minority finally are propelled into
twenties. Earlier onsets may occur; indeed some patients may
delirious mania. The rapidity with which patients pass from
have their first episode at 10 years of age or younger. After
hypomania through acute mania and on to delirious mania
the twenties the incidence of first episodes gradually
varies from a week to a few days to as little as a few hours.
decreases, with well over 90% of patients having had their
Indeed, in such hyperacute onsets, the patient may have
first episode before the age of 50. Onsets as late as the
already passed through the hypomanic stage and the acute
seventies or eighties have, though very rare, been seen.
manic stage before he is brought to medical attention. The duration of an entire manic episode varies from the extremes of as little as a few days or less to many years, and rarely
Premorbidly, these patients may either be normal or display
even to a decade or more. On the average, however, most
mild symptoms for a variable period of time before the first
first episodes of mania last from several weeks up to 3
months. In the natural course of events, symptoms tend to gradually subside; after they fade many patients feel guilty
CLINICAL FEATURES
over what they did and perhaps are full of self-reproach. Most patients are able to recall what happened during hypomania and acute mania; however, memory is often
The discussion of signs and symptoms proceeds in three
spotty for the events of delirious mania. With this brief
parts: first, a discussion of a manic episode; second, a
general description of a manic episode in mind, what follows
discussion of a depressive episode; and, third, a discussion of
now is a more thorough discussion of each of the three stages
Manic Episode Hypomania.
The nosology of the various stages of a manic episode has
In hypomania the mood is heightened and elevated. Most
changed over the decades. In current DSM-IV nomenclature,
often these patients are euphoric, full of jollity and
hypomanic episodes are separated from the more severe full
cheerfulness. Though at times selfish and pompous, their
manic episodes, which in turn are characterized as either
mood nevertheless is often quite “infectious.” They joke,
mild, moderate, severe, or severe with psychotic features.
make wisecracks and delightful insinuations, and those
Kraepelin, however, divided the “manic states” into four
around them often get quite caught up in the spirit, always
forms—hypomania, acute mania, delusional mania, and
laughing with the patient, and not at him. Indeed, when
delirious mania—and noted that his observation revealed “the
physicians find themselves unable to suppress their own
laughter when interviewing a patient, the diagnosis of
yet another prospect. Spending sprees are also typical.
hypomania is very likely. Self-esteem and self-confidence are
Clothes, furniture, and cars may be bought; the credit card is
greatly increased. Inflated with their own grandiosity,
pushed to the limit and checks, without any foundation in the
patients may boast of fabulous achievements and lay out
bank, may be written with the utmost alacrity. Excessive
plans for even grander conquests in the future. In a minority
jewelry and flamboyant clothing are especially popular. The
of patients, however, irritability may be the dominant mood.
overinvolvement of patients with other people typically leads
Patients become demanding, inconsiderate, and intemperate.
to the most injudicious and at times unwelcome
They are constantly dissatisfied and intolerant of others, and
entanglements. Passionate encounters are the rule, and
brook no opposition. Trifling slights may enrage the patient,
hypersexuality is not uncommon. Many a female hypomanic
and violent outbursts are not uncommon. At times,
has become pregnant during such escapades. If confronted
pronounced lability of mood may be evident; otherwise
with the consequences of their behavior, hypomanic patients
supremely contented patients may suddenly turn dark,
typically take offense, turn perhaps indignantly self-
righteous, or are quick with numerous, more or less plausible excuses. When hypomanic patients are primarily irritable rather then euphoric, their demanding, intrusive, and
In flight of ideas the patient’s train of thought is
injudicious behavior often brings them into conflict with
characterized by rapid leaps from one topic to another. When
flight of ideas is mild, the connections between the patient’s successive ideas, though perhaps tenuous, may nonetheless be “understandable” to the listener. In somewhat higher
Acute Mania.
grades of flight of ideas, however, the connections may seem to be illogical and come to depend more on puns and word
The transition from hypomania to acute mania is marked by a
plays. This flight of ideas is often accompanied by pressure of thought. Patients may report that their thoughts race, that
severe exacerbation of the symptoms seen in hypomania, and
they have too many thoughts, that they run on pell-mell.
the appearance of delusions. Typically, the delusions are grandiose: millions of dollars are held in trust for them;
Typically, patients also display pressure of speech. Here the listener is deluged with a torrent of words. Speech may
passersby stop and wait in deferential awe as they pass by;
become imperious, incredibly rapid, and almost unstoppable.
the President will announce their elevation to cabinet rank. Religious delusions are very common. The patients are
Occasionally, after great urging and with great effort, patients may be able to keep silent and withhold their speech, but not
prophets, elected by God for a magnificent, yet hidden,
for long, and soon the dam bursts once again.
purpose. They are enthroned; indeed God has made way for them. Sometimes these grandiose delusions are held constantly; however, in other cases patients may suddenly
Energy is greatly, even immensely, increased, and patients
boldly announce their belief, then toss it aside with laughter,
feel less and less the need for sleep. They are on the go, busy
only to announce yet another one. Persecutory delusions may
and involved throughout the day. They wish to be a part of
also appear and are quite common in those who are of a
life and to be involved more and more in the lives of those
predominantly irritable mood. The patients’ failures are not
around them. They are strangers to fatigue and are still
their own but the results of the treachery of colleagues or
hyperactive and ready to go when others must go to bed.
family. They are persecuted by those jealous of their
Eventually, the patients themselves may finally go to sleep,
grandeur; they are pilloried, crucified by the enemy.
but within a very brief period of time they then awaken,
Terrorists have set a watch on their houses and seek to
wide-eyed, and, finding no one else up, they may seek
destroy them before they can ascend to their thrones.
someone to wake up, or perhaps take a whistling stroll of the
Occasionally, along with delusions, patients may have
darkened neighborhood, or, if alone, they may spend the
isolated hallucinations. Grandiose patients hear a chorus of
hours before daybreak cleaning out closets or drawers,
angels singing their praises; the persecuted patients hear the
catching up on old correspondence, or even paying bills.
resentful muttering of the envious crowd.
In addition to these cardinal symptoms, hypomanic patients
The mood in acute mania is further heightened and often
are often extremely distractible. Other conversations and
quite labile. Domineeringly good-natured one moment, the
events, though peripheral to the patients’ present purposes,
patient, if thwarted at all, may erupt into a furious rage of
are as if glittering jewels that they must attend to, to take as
screaming, swearing, and assaultiveness. Furniture may be
their own, or simply to admire. In listening to patients, one
smashed and clothes torn apart. The already irritable patient
may find that a fragment of another conversation has
may become consistently, and very dangerously, hostile.
suddenly been interpolated into their flight of ideas, or they may stop suddenly and declare their unbounded admiration for the physician’s clothing, only then again to become one
Flight of ideas and pressured speech become very intense.
Patients seem unable to cease talking; they may scream, shout, bellow, sing in a loud voice or preach in a declamatory fashion to anyone whose ear they can catch.
Hypomanic patients rarely recognize that anything is wrong with them, and though their judgment is obviously impaired
Hyperactivity becomes more pronounced, and the patient’s
they have no insight into that condition. Indeed, as far as hypomanic patients are concerned, the rest of the world is
behavior may begin to fragment. Impulses come at cross
sick and impaired; if only the rest of the world could feel as
purposes, and patients, though increasingly active, may be unable to complete anything. Fragments of activity abound:
they do and see as clearly as they do, then the rest of the world would be sure to join them. These patients often enter
patients may run, hop in place, roll about the floor, leap from
into business arrangements with unbounded and completely
bed to bed, race this way and then that, or repeatedly change their clothes at a furious pace.
uncritical enthusiasm. Ventures are begun, stocks are bought on a hunch, money is loaned out without collateral, and when the family fortune is spent, the patient, undaunted, after
Occasionally, patients in acute mania may evidence a passing
perhaps a brief pause, may seek to borrow more money for
fragment of insight: they may suddenly leap to the tops of
tables and proclaim that they are “mad,” then laugh, lose the
Self-control is absolutely lost, and the patient has no insight
thought, and jump back into their pursuits of a moment ago.
and no capacity for it. Attempting to reason with the patient
Some may devote themselves to writing, flooding reams of
in delirious mania is fruitless, even assuming that the patient
paper with an extravagant handwriting, leaving behind an
stays still enough for one to try. The frenzy of these patients
almost unintelligible, tangential flight of written ideas.
is remarkable to behold and rarely forgotten. Yet in the
Patients may dress themselves in the most fantastic ways.
height of delirious mania, one may be surprised by the
Women may decorate themselves with garlands of flowers
appearance of a sudden calm. Instantly, the patient may
and wear the most seductive of dresses. Men may be
become mute and immobile, and such a catatonic stupor may
festooned with ribbons and jewelry. Unrestrainable sexuality
persist from minutes to hours only to give way again to a
may come to the fore. Patients may openly and shamelessly
storm of activity. Other catatonic signs, such as echolalia and
proposition complete strangers; some may openly and
echopraxia and even waxy flexibility, may also be seen.
exultantly masturbate. Strength may be greatly increased, and sensitivity to pain may be lost.
As noted earlier not all manic patients pass through all three stages; indeed some may not progress past a hypomanic state.
Delirious Mania.
Regardless, however, of whether the peak of severity of the individual patient’s episode is found in hypomania, in acute mania, or in delirious mania, once that peak has been
The transition to delirious mania is marked by the appearance
reached, a more or less gradual and orderly subsidence of
of confusion, more hallucinations, and a marked
symptoms occurs, which to a greater or lesser degree retraces
intensification of the symptoms seen in acute mania. A
the same symptoms seen in the earlier escalation. Finally,
dreamlike clouding of consciousness may occur. Patients
once the last vestiges of hypomanic symptoms have faded,
may mistake where they are and with whom. They cry out
the patient is often found full of self-reproach and shame
that they are in heaven or in hell, in a palace or in a prison;
over what he has done. Some may be reluctant to leave the
those around them have all changed—the physician is an
hospital for fear of reproach by those they harmed and
executioner; fellow patients are secret slaves. Hallucinations,
offended while they were in the manic episode.
more commonly auditory than visual, appear momentarily and then are gone, perhaps only to be replaced by another. The thunderous voice of God sounds; angels whisper secret
In current nomenclature, those patients whose manic
encouragements; the devil boasts at having the patient now;
episodes never pass beyond the stage of hypomania are said
the patient’s children cry out in despair. Creatures and faces
to have “Bipolar II” disorder, in contrast with “Bipolar I”
may appear; lights flash and lightning cracks through the
disorder wherein the mania does escalate beyond the
room. Grandiose and persecutory delusions intensify,
hypomanic stage. Recent data indicate that bipolar II disorder
especially the persecutory ones. Bizarre delusions may occur,
may be more common than bipolar I disorder; however,
including Schneiderian delusions. Electrical currents from the
should a patient with bipolar II disorder ever have a manic
nurses’ station control the patient; the patient remains in a
episode wherein stage II or III symptoms occurred, then the
telepathic communication with the physician or with the
diagnosis would have to be revised to bipolar I.
Occasionally the age of the patient may influence the
Mood is extremely dysphoric and labile. Though some
presentation of mania. Adolescents and children, for
patients still are occasionally enthusiastic and jolly,
example, seem particularly prone to the very rapid
irritability is generally quite pronounced. There may be
development of delirious mania. On the other extreme, in the
cursing, and swearing; violent threats are made, and if
elderly, one may see little or no hyperactivity. Some elderly
patients are restrained they may spit on those around them.
manic patients may sit in the same chair all day long,
Sudden despair and wretched crying may grip the patient,
chattering away in an explosive flight of ideas. Mental
only to give way in moments to unrestrained laughter.
retardation may also influence the presentation of mania. Here in the absence of speech one may see only increased, seemingly purposeless, activity.
Flight of ideas becomes extremely intense and fragmented. Sentences are rarely completed, and speech often consists of words or short phrases having only the most tenuous
Depressive Episodes
connection with the other. Pressure of speech likewise increases, and in extreme cases the patient’s speech may become an incoherent and rapidly changing jumble. Yet even
The depressive episodes seen in bipolar disorder, in contrast
in the highest grades of incoherence, where associations
to those typically seen in a major depression, tend to come on fairly acutely, over perhaps a few weeks, and often occur
become markedly loosened, these patients remain in lively contact with the world about them. Fragments of nearby
without any significant precipitating factors. They tend to be
conversations are interpolated into their speech, or they may
characterized by psychomotor retardation, hyperphagia, and hypersomnolence and are not uncommonly accompanied by
make a sudden reference to the physician’s clothing or to a disturbance somewhere else on the ward.
delusions or hallucinations. On the average, untreated, these bipolar depressions tend to last about a half year.
Hyperactivity is extreme, and behavior disintegrates into numerous and disparate fragments of purposeful activity.
Mood is depressed and often irritable. The patients are
Patients may agitatedly pace from one wall to the other, jump
discontented and fault-finding and may even come to loathe not only themselves but also everyone around them.
to a table top, beat their chest and scream, assault anyone nearby, pound on the windows, tear the bed sheets, prance, twitter, or throw off their clothes. Impulsivity may be
Energy is lacking; patients may feel apathetic or at times
extreme, and the patient may unexpectedly commit suicide
Thought becomes sluggish and slow. Patients cannot
then go on to execute a lively dance, all the while with tears
concentrate to read and cannot remember what they do read.
still streaming down their faces. Or a depressed and
Comprehending alternatives and bringing themselves to
psychomotorically retarded patient may consistently dress in
the brightest of clothes, showing a fixed smile on an otherwise expressionless face. These mixed-manic episodes must be distinguished from the transitional periods that may
Patients may lose interest in life; things appear dull and
appear in patients who “cycle” directly from a manic into a
depressive episode, or vice versa, without any intervening euthymic interval. These transitional periods are often
Many patients feel a greatly increased need for sleep. Some
marked by an admixture of both manic and depressive
may succumb and sleep 10, 14, or 18 hours a day. Yet no
symptoms; however, they do not “stand alone” as episodes of
matter how much sleep they get, they awake exhausted, as if
illness unto themselves, but are always both immediately
they had not slept at all. Appetite may also be increased and
preceded and followed by a more typical episode of
weight gain may occur, occasionally to an amazing degree.
homogenous manic or homogenous depressive symptoms. In
Conversely, some patients may experience insomnia or loss
contrast the mixed-manic episode “stands alone.” It starts
with mixed symptoms, endures with them, and finishes with them, and is neither immediately preceded nor immediately followed by an episode of mania or by an episode of
Psychomotor retardation is the rule, although some patients
may show agitation. In psychomotor retardation the patient may lie in bed or sit in the chair for hours, perhaps all day, profoundly apathetic and scarcely moving at all. Speech is
At this point, before proceeding to a consideration of course,
rare; if a sentence is begun, it may die in the speaking of it, as
two other disorders that are strongly associated with bipolar
if the patient had not the energy to bring it to conclusion. At
disorder should be mentioned, namely alcoholism and
times the facial expression may become tense and pained, as
cocaine addiction. During manic episodes, patients with these
if the patient were under some great inner constraint.
addictions are especially likely to take cocaine or drink even more heavily, and the effects of these substances may cloud the clinical picture.
Pessimism and bleak despair permeate these patients’ outlooks. Guilt abounds, and on surveying their lives patients find themselves the worst of failures, the greatest of sinners.
Effort appears futile, and enterprises begun in the past may be abandoned. They may have recurrent thoughts of suicide,
Bipolar disorder is an episodic or, as noted earlier, “cyclical”
and impulsive suicide attempts may occur.
illness, being characterized in most patients by the intermittent lifelong appearance of episodes of illness, in
Delusions of guilt and of well-deserved punishment and
between which most patients experience a “euthymic”
persecution are common. Patients may believe that they have
interval during which they more or less return to their normal
let children starve, murdered their spouses, poisoned the
wells. Unspeakable punishments are carried out: their eyes are gouged out; they are slowly hung from the gallows; they
The pattern and sequencing of successive episodes is quite
have contracted syphilis or AIDS, and these are a just
variable among patients. The duration of the euthymic
interval varies from as little as a few weeks or days to as long as years, or even decades. In contrast, however, to the
Hallucinations may also appear and may be quite fantastic.
extreme variability of the euthymic intervals among patients,
Heads float through the air; the soup boils black with blood.
finding a certain regular pattern in the history of any given
Auditory hallucinations are more common, and patients may
patient is not unusual. Indeed in some patients the euthymic
hear the heavenly court pronounce judgment. Foul odors may
interval is so regular that patients can predict sometimes to
be smelled, and poison may be tasted in the food.
the month when the next episode will occur. The postpartum period is a time of increased risk. Occasionally, one may also see a “seasonal” pattern, with manic episodes more likely in
In general a depressive episode in bipolar disorder subsides
the spring or early summer and depressive ones in the fall or
gradually. Occasionally, however, it may come to an abrupt
termination. A patient may arise one morning, after months of suffering, and announce a complete return to fitness and vitality. In such cases, a manic episode is likely to soon
Early on in the overall course of the illness the cycle length,
or time from the onset of one episode to the onset of the next, tends to shorten. Specifically, whereas the duration of the episodes themselves tends to be stable, the euthymic interval
Mixed-Manic Episode
shortens, so episodes come progressively closer together. With time, however, the duration of the euthymic interval
Mixed-manic episodes are not as common as manic episodes
or depressive episodes, but tend to last longer. Here one sees various admixtures of manic and depressive symptoms,
Patients who have four or more episodes of illness in any one
sometimes in sequence, sometimes simultaneously. Euphoric
year are customarily referred to as “rapid cyclers.” Although
patients, hyperactive and pressured in speech, may suddenly
only about 10% of all patients with bipolar disorder display
plunge into despair and collapse weeping into chairs, only to
such a pattern of rapid cycling, these patients are nevertheless
rise again within hours to their former elated state. Even
clinically quite important as they tend to be relatively
more extraordinary, patients may be weeping uncontrollably,
“resistant” to many currently available treatments. On the
with a look of unutterable despair on their faces, yet say that
other extreme, the euthymic interval may be so long, lasting
they are elated, that they never felt so well in their lives, and
many decades, that the patient dies before the second episode
is “due,” thereby having only one episode of illness during an
COMPLICATIONS
In mania, spending sprees and ill-advised business ventures
The sequence of episodes is also quite variable among
may land patients in serious debt, or even bankruptcy.
patients. Rarely would one find a patient whose course is
Hypersexuality may lead to unplanned and unwanted
characterized by regularly alternating manic and depressive
pregnancies or ill-considered marriages. A reckless
episodes; most patients show a preponderance of either
exuberance may carry the patient past all speed limits and
depressive episodes or of manic ones. For example, in an
into conflict with the law; accidents are common. Irritable
extreme case a patient may have throughout life perhaps six
manics are likewise often in conflict with the law and may
depressive episodes and only one manic one. On the other
pick fights and create disputes with whomever they come in
extreme, another patient might have up to a dozen episodes
contact. Friendships may be broken, and divorce may occur.
of mania and only one depressive one. Indeed one may encounter a patient who has only manic episodes and never any depressive ones. Such “unipolar manic” patients are very
Suicide occurs in from 10 to 20% of patients with bipolar
rare. In general, a depressive preponderance is more common
disorder and appears to be more common in those who have
only hypomanic episodes (i.e., those with bipolar II disorder) than in those whose manic episodes progress beyond the first stage (i.e., those with bipolar I disorder). Although most
As noted earlier, for most patients the interval between
suicides appear to occur during episodes of depression,
episodes is euthymic and free of symptoms. In at least a
patients in a mixed-manic episode may be at an even higher
quarter of all cases, however, the interval may be “colored”
by very mild symptoms, and the direction of this “coloring,” or its “polarity,” correlates with the preponderance of episodes. For example, a patient with very mild
The complications of a depressive episode are as outlined in
subhypomanic symptoms during the interval is likely to have
more manic episodes than depressive ones, and the converse holds true for the patients whose interval is clouded with
ETIOLOGY
mild depression or fatigue. In general, among women the preponderance of episodes are depressive; among men, manic.
Genetic factors almost certainly play a role in bipolar disorder. A higher prevalence of bipolar disorder exists among the first-degree relatives of patients with bipolar
In perhaps a quarter of all cases, the course exhibits
disorder than among the relatives of controls or the relatives
“coupling.” Here a manic episode may invariably and
of patients with major depression, and the concordance rate
immediately be followed by a depressive one, or vice versa.
among monozygotic twins is significantly higher than that
In such cases the transition from one episode to the next may
among dizygotic twins. Similarly and most tellingly,
be marked by a mixture of symptoms, as if the various
adoption studies have demonstrated that the prevalence of
symptoms of the preceding episode trailed off at different
bipolar disorder is several-fold higher among the biologic
rates, while the various symptoms of the following episode
parents of bipolar patients than among the biologic parents of
appeared also at varying rates, such that the two coupled
episodes in a sense overlapped and interdigitated with each other, with this interdigitation presenting as the mixture of symptoms. Such “overlap” or transitional experiences must,
Genetic studies in bipolar disorder have been plagued by
as noted earlier, be distinguished from mixed-manic episodes
failures of replication. In all likelihood, multiple genes on
multiple different chromosomes are involved, each conferring a susceptibility to the disease.
Occasionally, one may find bipolar patients in whom certain conditions, pharmacologic and otherwise, can more or less
Autopsy studies, likewise, have often yielded inconsistent
reliably precipitate a manic episode. These include
results. Perhaps the most promising finding is of a reduced
serotoninergic agents such as tryptophan or 5-
neuronal number in the locus ceruleus and median raphe
hydroxytryptophan; noradrenergic agents, such as cocaine,
stimulants, or sympathomimetics, or situations in which noradrenergic tone is increased as in alcohol or sedative-
Endocrinologic studies have yielded robust findings, similar
hypnotic withdrawal or in the abrupt discontinuation of long-
to those found in major depression, including non-
term treatment with clonidine; dopaminergic agents such as
suppression on the dexamethasone suppression test and a
L-dopa or bromocriptine; and treatment with exogenous
steroids, such as prednisone. Older antidepressants, such as the MAOIs and tricyclics, are particularly notorious for precipitating manic episodes in bipolar patients, and some
Other robust findings include a shortened latency to REM
evidence suggests that these antidepressants, in addition to
sleep upon infusion of arecoline and the remarkable ability of
being capable of precipitating a manic episode, may also alter
intravenous physostigmine to not only bring patients out of
the fundamental course of bipolar disorder and increase the
mania but also to cast them down past their baseline and into
frequency with which future episodes occur: newer
antidepressants, such as SSRIs, bupropion and venlafaxine, do not appear as likely to precipitate mania. Phototherapy
Taken together, these findings are consistent with the notion
may also induce manic episodes in those patients whose
that bipolar disorder is, in large part, an inherited disorder
course exhibits a “seasonal pattern.”
characterized by episodic perturbations in endocrinologic, noradrenergic, serotoninergic and cholinergic function, with these in turn possibly being related to subtle microanatomic changes in relevant brainstem structures.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
very long prodrome to bipolar disorder. Thus continued observation over many years may necessitate a diagnostic revision if a manic episode should ever occur.
In distinguishing bipolar disorder from other disorders, the single most useful differential feature is the course of the illness. Essentially no other disorder left untreated presents
The differential between a postpartum psychosis and a
with recurrent episodes of mood disturbance at least one of
bipolar disorder that has become “entrained” to the
which is a manic episode, with more or less full restitution to
postpartum period is discussed in that chapter.
normal functioning between episodes. Thus if the patient in question has had previous episodes and if the available history is complete, then one can generally state with
The persistence of very mild affective symptoms between
certainty whether the patient has bipolar disorder. However,
episodes might suggest, depending on the polarity of the symptoms, a diagnosis of dysthymia or of hyperthymia. Here,
these are two big “ifs,” and in clinical practice history may either be absent or unobtainable, and herein arises diagnostic
however, temporal continuity of these symptoms with a full
episode of illness betrays their true nature, that of either a prodrome or of a condition of only partial remission of a prior episode.
Occasionally a patient in a manic episode is brought to the emergency room by police with no other history except that he was arrested for disturbing the peace. If the patient is in
The distinction between a depressive episode occurring as part of a major depression and one occurring as part of
the stage of acute mania with perhaps irritability and delusions of persecution, one might wonder if the patient is
bipolar disorder is considered in the chapter on major
currently in the midst of the onset of paranoid schizophrenia
or of its exacerbation. Here the behavior of the patient when left undisturbed is helpful: left to themselves, patients with
TREATMENT
paranoid schizophrenia often sit quietly, patiently waiting for the next assault, whereas patients with acute mania continue to display their hyperactivity and pressured speech. If the
The overall treatment of bipolar disorder is conveniently
patient is in the stage of delirious mania, the differential
approached by considering, in turn, the treatment of the
would include an acute exacerbation of catatonic
manic or mixed-manic episode first, then the treatment of the
schizophrenia and also a delirium from some other cause.
depressive episode, in each instance considering three phases
The quality of the hyperactivity seen in the excited subtype
of treatment: acute, continuation, and preventive. As will be
of catatonic schizophrenia is different from that seen in
seen, of all the medications useful in bipolar disorder, lithium
mania. The catatonic schizophrenic, no matter how frenzied,
is probably the best choice as it is the only one which has
remains self-involved and has little contact with those around
been shown to be effective for all three phases of treatment
him. By contrast, manic patients, no matter how fragmented
their behavior, show a desire and a compelling interest to be involved with others. In the highest grade of delirious mania,
Manic or Mixed-Manic Episodes
the patient, as noted earlier, may lapse into a confusional stupor. At this point, the differential becomes very wide, as discussed in the chapter on delirium. At times, a “cross-
Acute Treatment.
sectional” view of the patient, say in the emergency room, may allow an accurate diagnosis; however, a “longitudinal”
The acute treatment of a manic or mixed-manic episode
view is always more helpful. As noted earlier, all patients in
almost always involves the administration of either a mood
delirious mania or acute mania have already passed from
stabilizer (i.e., lithium, valproate or carbamazepine) or an
relatively normal functioning through the distinctive stage of
antipsychotic (i.e., olanzapine, risperidone, aripiprazole,
mania. Obtaining a history of this progression from normal
quetiapine or ziprasidone), or most commonly, a combination
through and past stage I hypomania allows for a more certain
of a mood stabilizer and an antipsychotic. Although there are
no hard and fast rules for choosing among these agents, some general guidelines may be offered. Certainly, if the patient
The distinction between secondary mania and a manic
has a history of an excellent response to a particular agent,
episode of bipolar disorder is discussed in that chapter.
then it should be seriously considered. Lacking such a history, and assuming there are no significant contraindications, the first choice among the mood stabilizers
At times patients with schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type,
is probably lithium, as it has the longest track record.
may be very difficult to distinguish from those with bipolar
Divalproex is a close second, and, in the case of episodes
disorder. Here a precise interval history is absolutely
with a significant depressive component, and certainly in the
necessary. In schizoaffective disorder psychotic symptoms,
case of a mixed-manic episode, is actually superior to
such as delusions, hallucinations, or incoherence, persist
lithium. Another advantage of divalproex is the rapidity with
between the episodes, in contrast to the “free” intervals seen
which it becomes effective when a “loading” strategy is used,
in bipolar disorder. The interval psychotic symptoms seen in
with patients often responding in a matter of days, in contrast
schizoaffective disorder may be very mild indeed, and thus
with the week or two required with lithium. Carbamazepine
close and repeated observation over extended periods of time
is probably a little less effective than lithium, and, in general,
may be required to ascertain their presence.
is not as well-tolerated. Among the antipsychotics, the first choice is probably olanzapine in that it has the longest track
Cyclothymia may at times present diagnostic difficulty, for it
record among these second generation agents in this regard
also presents a history of discrete individual episodes. The
and has also, in contrast with the other second generation
difference is that in cyclothymia the manic symptoms are
agents, been shown to be effective in preventive treatment.
very mild. The possibility also exists, however, that the apparently cyclothymic patient is presenting, in fact, with a
When symptoms are relatively mild, that is to say of
need for tapering has not been demonstrated for the other
hypomanic intensity, utilization of a mood stabilizer alone
agents, prudence dictates the use of a gradual taper here also.
may be sufficient. However, when the mania has escalated into stage II or III, a mood stabilizer alone is generally not capable of controlling the clinical storm quickly enough, and
Preventive Treatment.
in such cases it is common practice to initiate treatment with a combination of a mood stabilizer and one of the second-
The decision to embark on preventive treatment is based on
generation antipsychotics. In emergent situations, one may
several factors including the following: frequency of
also employ one of the protocols outlined in the chapter on
episodes, severity of episodes, rapidity with which episodes
rapid pharmacologic treatment of agitation. Consideration
develop, and side effects of the agent used. Frequent
should also be given to ECT: bilateral ECT is effective for
episodes, perhaps occurring more than once every 2 years,
mania and is indicated when the foregoing treatments are not
usually constitute an indication for preventive treatment; a
successful or in life-threatening situations where urgent
frequency of one every 5 or 10 years, however, may be such
improvement is absolutely required. Should ECT be utilized,
that the risk to the patient of another episode is outweighed
lithium should not be administered concurrently, as it may
by the trouble of taking medicine and any attendant side
effects. Severe episodes, however, no matter how infrequent, may warrant prevention. Whereas the patient’s employer and
Many manic patients require admission to a locked unit.
family may be able to tolerate a manic episode limited to a hypomanic stage, a mania that enters a delirious stage is
Stimulation, including visitors, mail, and phone calls, should be kept to an absolute minimum, as it routinely exacerbates
usually so destructive that it should be guarded against.
manic symptoms. Indeed, occasional patients in acute mania,
Patients whose episodes tend to develop very slowly, over perhaps weeks or a month, may be able to “catch” themselves
still possessed of a few tattered shreds of insight, may demand to be put in seclusion. Isolated from all stimuli, they
before their insight and judgment are lost. By making timely
gradually improve, although their symptoms only partially
application for treatment, they may be able to bring the episode under control on an outpatient basis. Those whose
abate. A calm, patient, and nonconfrontive manner is generally best; sometimes sharing the patient’s jokes may be
episodes come on acutely over a few days or even hours,
calming and helpful in enlisting cooperation. At times,
however, are defenseless and thus more appropriate for preventive treatment.
however, a “show of force” may be necessary; indeed violent, irritable, and very agitated patients, though completely unfazed by routine measures, may calm down
If preventive treatment is elected, then the patient should be
immediately upon the appearance of several formidable male
treated with a mood stabilizer (lithium, divalproex or
orderlies, who, though calm, clearly “mean business.”
carbamazepine) or olanzapine. Among the mood stabilizers,
lithium has the longest track record and is therefore a reasonable first choice. Divalproex and carbamazepine may also be considered; however, the data supporting the use of
Continuation Treatment.
divalproex as a preventive agent are not that good and carbamazepine is generally not very well tolerated. If lithium
Once acute treatment has been successful in bringing the
is used, it is important to keep the serum level between 0.6
manic symptoms under control, continuation treatment is
and 1.0 mEq/L. The optimum dose for valproate and for
begun. As noted earlier the average duration of the first
carbamazepine for prophylaxis has not as yet been
manic episode is about 3 months, and that of a mixed-manic
determined; prudence suggests using a dose similar to that
episode a little longer. The purpose of continuation treatment
which was effective for continuation treatment. When
is to prevent a breakthrough of symptoms until such time as
“breakthrough” symptoms of mania occur it is imperative to
the episode itself has run its course. Generally this is
determine the patient’s thyroid status: hypothyroidism, even
accomplished by continuing the regimen that was effective
if manifest by only a slight rise in TSH, will blunt the
during the acute phase. If lithium is used it may be necessary
response to any mood stabilizer, and must be corrected.
during the continuation phase to reduce the dose. In many
When breakthrough mania occurs despite normal thyroid
patients even though the dose of lithium is held constant, the
status and good compliance, consideration may be given to
blood level rises when the manic symptoms eventually come
switching to monotherapy with another mood stabilizer or to
under complete control. The unexpected appearance of side
using a combination of mood stabilizers such as lithium plus
effects to lithium may indicate this and should prompt a
divalproex or lithium plus carbamazepine. Given the
blood level determination. If ECT were used, a mood
possibility of such “breakthrough” manias, it is generally
stabilizer should be started after treatment is terminated.
prudent, in the case of reliable patients being maintained on a mood stabilizer, to prescribe a supply of adjunctive medication (e.g., olanzapine) to take at home in order to abort
If the patient decides not to enter into a preventive phase of
an episode and obviate the need for admission. In this regard,
treatment, one must estimate when the patient’s current
outpatients should be clearly instructed to call the physician
episode, in all likelihood, will go into a spontaneous
should they even experience a “hint” of manic symptoms.
remission. A prior history of manic episodes may provide
Olanzapine has recently been shown to be effective in
some guidance here; if that is lacking, one is guided by the
preventive treatment, and thus may be considered as an
duration of an average episode, mentioned earlier. Clearly, if
alternative to a mood stabilizer. It must be borne in mind,
the patient is having breakthrough manic symptoms, no
however, that, as compared with the mood stabilizers,
matter how mild, treatment should continue. Furthermore,
especially lithium, the experience with olanzapine is limited;
even when the estimated date of remission has passed, one
furthermore, emerging data regarding the risks of diabetes
should continue treatment if the patient’s life is unstable, and
and hyperlipidemia with olanzapine may also temper
wait until a period of relative stability has occurred before
enthusiasm for the long-term use of this agent.
exposing the patient to the risk, however small, of relapse. If lithium was utilized, it is important to taper the dose over a few weeks time, as it appears that abrupt discontinuation of
As noted in the section on course, various pharmacologic
lithium predisposes to a recurrence of mania. Although the
conditions, such as the use of sympathomimetics, the abrupt
discontinuation of long-term treatment with clonidine, and
Other Treatment Considerations
the like, may precipitate manic episodes, and these conditions should be avoided whenever possible. Furthermore, as noted earlier, insomnia, or simply voluntarily going without sleep,
Pregnancy.
may also precipitate a manic episode, and consequently, good sleep hygiene should be promoted.
Pregnancy constitutes a special challenge in the treatment of bipolar disorder. None of the mood stabilizers are safe during
Recently it has been shown that cognitive behavioral therapy
pregnancy (especially the first trimester). First generation antipsychotics, such as haloperidol, are probably less
may, when used in conjunction with preventive pharmacologic treatment, reduce the frequency of
teratogenic; the teratogenic potential of olanzapine is not as
breakthrough episodes. The mechanism here is not clear, and
yet clear. If mania does occur during pregnancy, then the risks to the fetus must be carefully weighed against the risks
it also must be kept in mind that no form of psychotherapy is effective for either acute or continuation treatment of mania.
inherent in a manic episode. ECT should be carefully considered given that, with proper anesthetic technique, it is of low risk to the fetus.
Depressive Episodes
Bipolar women currently in the preventive phase of treatment
Acute Treatment.
may often be safely managed into and through a planned pregnancy. Preventive treatment may be continued up to a few days before conception is attempted. If conception does
When a depressive episode occurs in a patient with bipolar
not occur, preventive treatment is restarted and continued
disorder the first step in the acute phase of treatment is to
until the couple again wishes to conceive. Once conception
ensure that the patient is taking an antimanic drug, such as
does occur, preventive treatment is withheld, to be restarted
lithium, valproate, or carbamazepine, in a dose that would be
immediately upon delivery; indeed, barring obstetric
effective in the acute treatment phase of mania. If the
complications, it should be restarted within hours. In
depression is not severe, one may want to wait 2 or 3 weeks
collaboration with the obstetrician, adjunctive treatment is
to see if the depressive symptoms begin to clear, as this may
then made available should manic symptoms appear. In cases
often happen when one of these three agents is used. When
where the risk of a relapse of mania is high and outweighs
depressive symptoms persist or when they are so severe to
the risk to the fetus, one may consider restarting a mood
begin with that one cannot wait, one may add an
stabilizer after the first trimester. With regard to breast
antidepressant or consider adding lamotrigine or perhaps
feeding, no firm advice can be given: although maternal use
topiramate. Traditionally an antidepressant has been used;
of lithium, valproate and carbamazepine have all been rarely
however, though effective, all the antidepressants entail the
associated with adverse effects in breast-fed infants, large,
risk of precipitating a manic episode; a strategy for choosing
controlled studies are lacking. Consequently the decision to
and utilizing an antidepressant is discussed in the chapter on
breast feed or not should be made in light of the entire
major depression. Neither lamotrigine nor topiramate carry a
clinical picture, including the mother’s illness and response
risk of inducing a manic episode, and between the two, the
evidence for the effectiveness of lamotrigine is much stronger. In mild cases of depression, one may also consider the use of cognitive-behavioral therapy.
Substance Use. Continuation Treatment.
As noted earlier, alcohol abuse or alcoholism and cocaine addiction are not infrequently associated with bipolar disorder, and these must also be treated.
Once the depressive symptoms are relieved, treatment should be continued until the patient has been asymptomatic for a significant period of time. If an antidepressant were added to
a mood stabilizer, one should probably consider
discontinuing the antidepressant after the patient has been
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Stephen G. Boyce, MD, FACS K. Robert Wil iams, MD CONSULTATION APPOINTMENT Please make these preparations for your 1st appointment with your surgeon. 1. Complete steps 1-3 on the Coversheet Checklist 2. We will need to perform some tests to evaluate and prepare you for surgery. The cost of these is in addition to your consultation. Do not take any Antibiotic, Pepto-Bismol or Proton Pump
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